^TORONTO Archives min ni ni h mi h h ii TORONTO BY-LAW NUMBER 1991-0467 BOX NUMBER P020192 Produced according to archival standards for the creation of electronic records by the City of Toronto Archives, 255 Spadina Road, Toronto, Ontario, M5R 2V3. The images contained in this electronic document were created during the regular course of business and are true and correct copies of the originals retained by the City Clerk's Office at the City of Toronto Archives. SUPPLEMENTARY FILE , 1991 -0467-01 [ naming convention for oversize scans ] BILL No. 497 No. A By-law TO designate the properties at 25 King Street West (Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce Building) and 199 Bay Street (Commerce Court) of architectural value or interest. Passed wW/- /¾. 19 C/7v Clerk Certified as to form and legality and as being within the powers o£ Council to enact, City Solicitor ^/a. i o a ^ / p., /? ?t 06-017 No. 467-91. A BY-LAW To designate the properties at 25 King Street West ( Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce Building) and 199 Bay Street (Commerce Court) of architectural value or interest. (Passed August 12,1991.) Whereas by Clauses 14 and 15 of Neighbourhoods Committee Report No. 10, adopted by Council at its ^ meeting held on August 12,1991, authority was granted to designate the properties at 25 King Street West and 199 Bay Street of architectural value or interest; and Whereas the Ontario Heritage Act authorizes the Council of a municipality to enact by-laws to designate real property, including all the buildings and structures thereon, to be of historic or architectural value or interest; and Whereas the Council of The Corporation of the City of Toronto has caused to be served upon the owners of the lands and premises known as 25 King Street West and 199 Bay Street and upon the Ontario Heritage Foundation notice of intention to so designate the aforesaid real properties and has caused such notice of intention to be published in a newspaper having a general circulation in the municipality once for each of three consecutive weeks; and Whereas the reasons for designation are set out in Schedule "B" hereto; and Whereas no notice of objection to the said proposed designation has been served upon the clerk of the municipality; Therefore the Council of The Corporation of the City of Toronto enacts as follows: 1. There is designated as being of architectural value or interest the real properties more particularly described and shown on Schedules "A" and "C" hereto, known as 25 King Street West and 199 Bay Street. 2. The City Solicitor is hereby authorized to cause a copy of this by-law to be registered against the property described in Schedule "A" hereto in the proper land registry office. 3. The City Clerk is hereby authorized to cause a copy of this by-law to be served upon the owners of the Council Chamber, Toronto, August 12,1991. (L.S.) 2 1991 CITY OF TORONTO BY-LAWS No. 467-91 SCHEDULE "A" In the City of Toronto, in the Municipality of Metropolitan Toronto and Province of Ontario, being composed of Unit 1 on Plan D-106 registered in the Land Registry Office for the Land Titles Division of Metropolitan Toronto (No. 66). Being Parcel Plan-1 in the Register for Section D-106. The hereinbefore described land being delineated by heavy outline on Plan SYE2513, dated August 6,1991, as set out in Schedule "C". SCHEDULE "B" Reasons for the designation of the properties at 25 King Street West (Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce Building) and 199 Bay Street (Commerce Court): Heritage Property Report Canadian Bank of Commerce Building and Commerce Court 25 King Street West and 199 Bay Street March 1991 TABLE OF CONTENTS Basic Building Data 1 1. Canadian Bank of Commerce Building 1 2. Commerce Court 2 Historical Background 3 1. Canadian Bank of Commerce 3 2. Canadian Bank of Commerce Building 4 3. Commerce Court 6 Architectural Description 7 1. Canadian Bank of Commerce Building 7 2. Commerce Court 9 Context 10 Summary 10 Sources Consulted 11 1991 CITY OF TORONTO BY-LAWS 3 No. 467-91 Attachments: I Historical Photograph, Canadian Bank of Commerce Building II extract, The Caduceus, July 1930 m extracts, The Canadian Architect, March 1973 IV Location Map V Architectural Practice of Darling and Pearson Basic Building Data: Canadian Bank of Commerce Building Address: 25 King Street West (southwest corner of King Street West and Jordan Street) Ward: Current Name: Commerce Court North Historical Name: Canadian Bank of Commerce Building Construction Date: 1929-31 Architect: Darling and Pearson with York and Sawyer Contractor/Builder: Anglin-Norcross, contractors; Harkness and Hertzberg, engineers Additions/Alterations : west wall and interior altered in 1972 Original Owner: Canadian Bank of Commerce Original Use: commercial (office building) Current Use: commercial (office building) Heritage Category: A Recording Date: March 5,1991 Recorder: HPD:ka Basic Building Data: Commerce Court Address: 199 Bay Street (southeast corner of King Street West and Bay Street) Ward: 6 Current Name: Commerce Court (consisting of Commerce Court West, South and East) Historical Name: not applicable Construction Date: 1968-72 Architect: I. M. Pei and Associates with Page and Steele 4 1991 CITY OF TORONTO BY-LAWS No. 467-91 Contractor/Builder: V. K. Mason and Peter Kiewit Sons Company of Canada Limited Additions/Alterations : unknown Original Owner: Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce Original Use: commercial (office building) Current Use: commercial (office building) Heritage Category: A Recording Date: March 5,1991 Recorder: HPD:ka HISTORY 1. Canadian B ank of Commerce: The Canadian Bank of Commerce (incorporated in 1858 as the Bank of Canada, and renamed to avoid confusion with the Bank of Upper Canada) began operations in 1866, with headquarters in premises at Yonge and Colborne Streets. William McMaster, the Senator and Baptist philanthropist who developed a fortune through wholesale dry goods, served as the first president. The Canadian Bank of Commerce absorbed five competing financial institutions between 1869 and 1911. By the 1920s, the bank had expanded from 42 Ontario branches to 791 divisions across Canada and in the United States, England, the West Indies, and the Bahamas. In 1889-90, a head office was built on the southwest corner of King and Jordan Streets according to the designs of Richard Waite, an architect based in Buffalo, New York. The selection of the designer was indicative of a preference in Canada (particularly in financial circles) during the closing decades of the 19th century for American architectural firms known for their innovative spatial organization, early use of iron and steel, and interpretation of historical styles for contemporary purposes. In response to this situation, where foreign architects received a disproportionate share of the major contracts in Toronto, Canadian architects and designs were promoted zealously by newly formed organizations (the Architectural Guild of Toronto and the Ontario Association of Architects) and in periodicals such as The Canadian Architect and Builder and Construction. In 1914, the Canadian Bank of Commerce decided to demolish the existing headquarters and replace it with a more substantial office building serving the bank and select tenants. These plans were delayed by the First World War, and afterward by post-war construction costs and uncertain labour conditions. The design for the head office is attributed to John Pearson of the established Toronto firm of Darling and Pearson, in association with York and Sawyer of New York City and James Nicholl of the Canadian Bank of Commerce. Pearson (1867-1940) was born in Chesterfield, England and educated at Wesley College (University of Sheffield) and in Europe prior to immigrating to Canada in 1888. In 1891, Pearson and Henry Sproatt became partners in the local firm of Darling and Curry. Following Curry's retirement in 1893 and Sproatt's departure in 1897, the firm was renamed Darling and Pearson, a title retained after Darling's death in 1923. While Darling and Pearson executed numerous commissions of note around the city (see Attachment V), the firm is identified foremost with projects for the University of Toronto over a twenty-year period. In recognition of this role, Pearson became the first Canadian to receive an honorary degree of Doctor of Architecture from the University in 1932. Pearson also served as president of the Ontario Association of Architects (1926), was elected as an Associate of the Royal Canadian Academy of the Arts (1929), and was made a Fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects (1926) and of the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada (1930). 1991 CITY OF TORONTO BY-LAWS 5 No. 467-91 In 1902, Darling and Pearson oversaw renovations to "Long Garth," the residence of Sir Byron Edmund Walker (knighted by King George V in 1910), who served as the president of the Canadian Bank of Commerce from 1907 until 1924. Darling and Pearson received the commissions for the Royal Ontario Museum in 1910-14 and the Art Museum of Toronto (later the Art Gallery of Ontario) in 1918, institutions founded with the support of Walker. After an interval wherein Darling and Pearson designed several branches of the Canadian Bank of Commerce and supervised extensive renovations to Waite's building, the firm was engaged for the new head office. 2. Canadian Bank of Commerce Building: Construction of the Canadian Bank of Commerce Building began in July, 1929, following the issuance of a building permit for a structure with an estimated value of four million dollars. The design introduced a 34-storey edifice, purportedly the tallest structure in the British Empire upon completion. John Pearson embarked on the project with experience designing more modest skyscrapers.
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